Medicine Hat News

Treat others the way you want to be treated

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Dear editor,

To mask, or not to mask. That seems to be the “operative question” during these days of living with COVID 19.

Given that we do not have a “definitive cure/treatment “for COVID-19; given that we do not have a vaccine for COVID-19; given that COVID19 is easily transmissi­ble from one infected person to another; given that people who do not have the “signs of symptoms” of COVID-19 can infect others before they have the “signs and symptoms” of COVID-19; given that simple things like washing your hands, avoiding crowds, practicing physical distancing, and wearing a mask when you can not be assured that physical distancing can be achieved/ maintained, have been shown to reduce the spread of “the beast”; the reluctance to wear a mask when “out in public” is troubling.

If you have a medical/physical condition that precludes you from safely wearing a mask/face covering in public, there are “outside the box” alternativ­es to reduce your need to go out in public, and you are probably in the segment of the population that is most susceptibl­e to having a “severe outcome” should you contract “the beast”, and perhaps shouldn’t be “out and about” unless absolutely necessary.

If you want your local grocery store/pharmacy/gas station/hardware store, bank, retail establishm­ent to be there to serve you, wear a mask when you are in them.

If you want your minister/ pastor/priest, doctor, dentist, lawyer, accountant, pharmacist, hairdresse­r/barber to be there to serve you, wear a mask. If you want your electricia­n, plumber, carpenter, mechanic, yard care people, cleaning help to be there to serve you, wear a mask. If you want your child’s school, daycare, day home to be there for your child, wear a mask. If you want the economy to be as open as it is, if you want the economy to thrive, so families can financiall­y survive, wear a mask.

Wearing a mask doesn’t mean you are “weak.” It doesn’t mean you are “acting like a sheep.” It doesn’t mean you are “caving into pressure.” Wearing a mask, to protect those around you is a sign of respect and caring for others. Wearing a mask is part of “treating other people the way you want to be treated” (some refer to this as “the Golden Rule”).

When you see someone wearing a mask, thank them for respecting you enough to take this simple precaution­ary measure to protect you. Show that you have respect for others by wearing a mask when out in public. Respecting each other, and caring for each other are hallmarks of a civil, functionin­g society. Let’s demonstrat­e that we are members of a civil, functionin­g society. Let’s look out for each others, and do the best we can to ensure that we are treating others they way we want to be treated.

Margaret Taylor

Medicine Hat

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